Matter of W. v. J.

2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U)
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedMay 31, 2005
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U) (Matter of W. v. J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of W. v. J., 2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

Matter of W. v J. (2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U)) [*1]
Matter of W. v J.
2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U)
Decided on May 31, 2005
Family Court, New York County
Jurow, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on May 31, 2005
Family Court, New York County


Matter of W. J.




xx-xxx

George L. Jurow, J.

In this highly contested custody dispute, each parent seeks custody of the subject child, born December 7th, 2000. The parties have been litigating custody and visitation issues over the past four or five years, that is, virtually from the child's birth. Eventually, a forensic evaluation was ordered and upon completion of the forensic evaluation the matter went to trial. The trial was lengthy, consuming approximately ten or eleven days, many witnesses were called, and numerous exhibits were introduced in evidence.

After considering the entire record, the Court finds that the record, by more than a preponderance of the credible evidence, supports an award of both legal and primary residential custody to the father, with a specific type of access or visitation schedule granted to the mother. This decision and conclusions are also consistent with the findings and recommendations of both the forensic evaluator and the child's law guardian.

What follows is an assessment of the evidentiary record, including the forensic evaluations, a summary of the essential elements of the in-court testimony, and an analysis of the full evidentiary record as it relates to the Court's conclusions.

By way of a brief historical predicate, the parties, the parents, are both physicians. Dr. J., the mother, is a pain management specialist. The father, Dr. W., is a urologist. The parents met in 1996 and eventually began a romantic relationship. During this relationship there were various discussions of marriage, but that never occurred. There is a good deal of material in the record about the marital discussions and the parties' intent concerning marriage, but what appears to be the case is that the father had significant reservations about marriage, although the mother kept pressing the issue.

For whatever reasons, despite their nonmarital status, the parties chose to have a child. The record is clear, as will be noted further below, that the mother was extremely angry at the father for ultimately not marrying her. In fact, as early as a court appearance on December 17th, 2001, the mother without hesitation vented her anger at the father in court, primarily because she felt he had "used her as a vehicle," rather than entering into a long-term marital relationship. The record clearly indicates that the mother's initial rage, centering on the marital issue, but apparently exacerbated by other variables, has continued unabated to this day.

Soon after the child's birth, the father became concerned about and complained of behavior by the mother that was intended to or had the effect of restricting his access to the child. [*2]Numerous court appearances occurred, centering on the issue of obstructionist behavior by the mother and the father's attempts to gain adequate access.

During a period in which this Court was away, a covering judge, Judge Susan Knipps, after hearing about one of these alleged obstructionist episodes by the mother, gave the father temporary legal custody in July of 2002, and that interim order has remained in effect to this day. The current arrangement is that the child spends two-week periods with the father, then a week with the mother, and then resumes two weeks with the father. It is the appropriateness of this arrangement, and who should be the primary legal and physical custodian, that was the focus of the litigation.

The Court appointed Dr. Stephen Herman, a psychiatrist, to conduct the forensic evaluation. He was qualified as an expert in psychiatry and forensic child custody evaluation. Initially, I will summarize Dr. Herman's evaluation. It is important to note that the evaluation process contained some unusual complexity in that Dr. Herman conducted two evaluations, the second being a "supplementary evaluation," and thus submitted two evaluation reports to the Court. The first evaluation report was dated August 27th, 2003, and the second supplementary or updated forensic evaluation report was dated March 8th, 2004. Both reports are, of course, in evidence and were supplemented by extensive in-court testimony, both direct and cross of Dr. Herman.

In his first report, Dr. Herman summarized the relationship between the parties and noted the marital issue dispute, that is, that the father was unenthusiastic about marriage but that the mother was promoting and pushing for a marital relationship. Dr. Herman concluded, after multiple interviewing, etc., that the child has a deep connection with both of her parents and that the child appears to be in good psychological health. He noted the mother's chronic anger at the father. He believed that although much of her anger may have been initially justified, the way in which she has expressed it over time has caused harm to the child. In particular, Dr. Herman noted numerous critical communications (such as e-mails) filled with criticisms of the father's parenting. And, perhaps more important, Dr. Herman noted that the mother has raised what he called the "nuclear bomb" of sexual misconduct.

Dr. Herman noted that although he did not conduct a formal sexual abuse evaluation, he stated that there was no evidence, based upon seeing the child and the father, that there was any molestation. He stated that it was important that the mother get rid of her idea that the father may have sexually molested the child.

Dr. Herman further noted in his report what he called two "boundary" problems related to the father. One concerned the act of the father, when present in the delivery room during the birth of the child, of inserting a urinary catheter inside of the mother, in order to relieve her of severe pain she was experiencing. Dr. Herman characterized this as an act of urological control, rather than a humanitarian gesture. The second boundary issue he noted concerned the father changing the child's diaper in his (empty) waiting room. [*3]

With respect to the mother, Dr. Herman in his conclusions noted a serious concern with the mother's therapist, whom he had contacted and whom he believed was "fueling" the mother's allegations against the father. He suggested that the mother obtain a new therapist in order to help her "move on and let go of her insinuations about Dr. W. being a molester."

Ultimately, Dr. Herman recommended in his first report that the mother be the primary custodian and that the father receive extensive visitation. (The two so-called "boundary" episodes involving the father appeared to play a role in the custody recommendations.) However, in what was perhaps a warning to the mother at the end of his report, Dr. Herman stated, "Dr. J. should know that if she impedes this child's access to her father, she does great harm to her child, returns this matter to court, wastes more money and could ultimately lead to her losing custody."

Following completion of Dr.

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2005 NY Slip Op 51061(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-w-v-j-nycfamct-2005.